Frontlines Dispatches - Vol II, Number 9, September 2020 Page 1
Africa 2 ............................................................................................................................................................
North & South America 5 .......................................................................................................................
Asia 9 ................................................................................................................................................................
Europe 10 .........................................................................................................................................................
Pacific 11 ...........................................................................................................................................................
World 12...........................................................................................................................................................
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DEDICATED TO THE WORLD’S CUSTODIANS OF WILD SPACES & WILDLIFE
Frontlines Dispatches - Vol II, Number 9, September 2020 Page 2
Africa
Coexistence is the key to survival. The image above (an elephant being driven out of farm
fields by a vehicle) is from “The Edge of Existence,” a forthcoming documentary about human-
wildlife conflict on the boundaries of conservation areas in Africa. And an article in the Stanford
Social Innovation Review covers conservation in the Serengeti, Okavango Delta and Kalahari
regions, some of the world’s most prolific wildlife ecosystems, which are surrounded by fast-
growing human communities:
“Rural livelihoods depend on these forests, fisheries and rangelands, so effective and lasting
conservation strategies must find ways not only to protect wildlife and the environment but
also to deliver economic opportunities at local and national scales. In Kenya, for example, up to
65% of all wildlife is found on community and private lands, outside government parks and
reserves, and wildlife tourism is a multi-billion dollar industry . . . As the President of Botswana
wrote last year in the Wall Street Journal, ‘Elephants need to constitute a benefit, not a burden,
to those who live side-by-side with them.’
“All of this is easier said than done, and conservation is littered with projects that promised to
make conservation profitable and beneficial to local communities but struggled to deliver. But
since Zimbabwe’s CAMPFIRE program in the 1980s—which helped pioneer the idea of
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Frontlines Dispatches - Vol II, Number 9, September 2020 Page 3
generating community-level incentives for wildlife conservation through sustainable and
locally managed use—the region has been a source of fertile innovation for conservation
efforts around the world. Today, it’s clear that it can be done: A “conservation economy” can
create jobs and attract investment while protecting and sustaining the ecological wealth that
peoples’ livelihoods depend on. A rising generation of African conservation entrepreneurs . . . is
reframing conservation as a growth sector.”
No more donkey skins for China. Kenya is the latest African country to ban the export of
donkey “products.” Three slaughterhouses then took the government to court, according to an
August 14 Daily Maverick article. In 2016-18, the skins of more than 300,000 of Kenya’s 2
million donkeys were sent to China for “traditional medicine.” (There’s more on the global
massacre of donkeys in Science.) In East Africa, women in particular rely on donkeys to carry
water, firewood and other necessities.
The pandemic is a crisis for conservation across Southern Africa. A team of conservation
leaders proposes—in this May 20 Mongabay.com article—to turn the crisis into opportunity by
questioning assumptions, refining existing models and improving conservation practices.
But the Southern African Wildlife College is being kept afloat by the Friends of African
Wildlife and the Ivan Carter Wildlife Conservation Alliance during the COVID-19 lockdown,
according to the August issue of The Bateleur, its newsletter. The school, near Kruger Park’s
Orphen Gate, teaches students how to protect Africa’s natural resources and biodiversity.
COVID-19 is hardly Africa’s first pandemic. AIDS, for example, is still killing Africans. And
outbreaks of rinderpest in 1887-96 and 1993-97 killed 90% of Southern and East Africa’s
cattle, decimated wildlife and created a staggering human tragedy, says a July 20 article in
AfricaGeographic.com.
Baby boom at Amboseli. US National Public Radio reported that as of World Elephant Day,
August 12, 170 elephant calves had been born at Kenya’s Amboseli National Park—while in
2018, only 113 calves were born there. (Elephant pregnancies last almost two years.) The
higher birth rate is probably due to more rain, which means more vegetation and fodder. The
Kenya Wildlife Service also says it has been able to curb ivory poaching—since 1989, the
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country’s elephant population has reportedly climbed from 16,000 animals to some 34,800 by
the end of 2019.
Hyenas killed 161 head of livestock in 2017-19 in Namibia’s Zambezi region (formerly the
Caprivi), reported the Kwando Carnivore Project in June. In a separate analysis, the KWC
reported the loss of 416 cattle to lions in 2013-19 in Mudumu South, also in Zambezi.
Lions avoid cattle with eyes on their backsides say these researchers in The Conversation on
August 7. Ambush predators like lions are less likely to attack if the cows have eyes painted on
their rumps. (Tigers in India reportedly exhibit similar behavior.)
Removing cattle from Bwabwata National Park will not hurt livelihoods, says Namibia’s
Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism, which pointed out that the region’s San people
earn up to N$5 million ($285,000) annually from hunting concessions alone. But the
Hambukushu community objects to the removal of cattle from Bwabwata and wants parklands
for farming. The story was on NBC Namibia on August 7.
The 18th annual African Wildlife Consultative Forum is planned for November 9-13, in
Kasane, Botswana. It convenes government officials, professional hunting associations,
conservation policy experts and wildlife biologists.
Bushmen go digital. San hunters of the Kalahari are loading an app called CyberTracker into
their smartphones to record where they’ve found wildlife and animal sign. The hunters are paid
for their inputs and the data help scientists plot the region’s biodiversity. CyberTracker is also
used by indigenous hunters in Australia and for land management in Canada, dolphin studies
off New Zealand, whale monitoring in Antarctica and turtle research in the Pacific. The story
was on CNN on July 9.
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North & South America
A ‘watershed moment’ for US water quality—a bad one. That’s how Ohio State University
researchers, writing in Science on August 14, describe the potential impact of a new federal
ruling that proposes to reduce protection of many waterways and wetlands under the Clean
Water Act.
Pebble Mine shot down, finally. Maybe. Alaska’s huge Pebble Mine project was green-lighted
in July after 20+ years of controversy—and then delayed again, on August 24, after influential
people connected to the Trump Administration went public with their concerns about damage
to Bristol Bay. As a result, the US Corps of Engineers ruled that the mining company “must
show within 90 days how it will compensate for harming more than 2,800 acres of wetlands,
130 miles of streams and more than 130 acres of open water within Alaska’s Koktuli River
Watershed.” The proposed mine site is at the river’s headwaters. The news broke on
WashingtonPost.com on August 24.
Changes to Alaska’s hunting laws have been sensationalized and misinterpreted, writes the
Director of Wildlife Conservation for the Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game in a June 16 article on
MustReadAlaska.com. (Some general-media coverage—discussed in OutdoorLife in June—has
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been misleading or false.) The recent federal ruling re-aligns wildlife regulations in Alaska’s
national preserves with the state’s own laws; it does not legalize hunting in national parks. And
some of the hunting or trapping methods under attack are restricted to traditional native
Alaskan practices in remote areas. Baiting and trapping are closely regulated by ADF&G. A
series of videos and the booklet Hunt Alaska explain the state’s predator management
programs.
Speaking of Alaska, lynx are being spotted even in Anchorage. The reason appears to be a
boom in the population of the cats’ favorite meal, the snowshoe hare. NatGeo.com reported
the story on July 22.
A NY judge has halted changes to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act sought by the Interior Dept.,
the National Audubon Society reported on August 12—changes that would have cut
protection of more than 1,000 wild bird species. The judge struck down the administration's
argument that the MBTA only applies to the intentional killing of birds and not “incidental”
killing from industrial activities. “It is not only a sin to kill a mockingbird, it is also a crime,” she
wrote in her ruling, citing Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird.
President Trump has signed into law the GAOA, the Great American Outdoors Act, which
received broad support in both houses of Congress. The law “fully and permanently funds the
Land and Water Conservation Fund [at $900 million/year] and provides $9.5 billion over five
years to fix maintenance problems . . . in America’s public lands.” An August 21 opinion piece in
The Colorado Sun explains the rightness of using “dirty” oil money to further conservation.
$5 million in federal funding will go to combat chronic wasting disease, but nearly a third of
the money is for commercial deer farms with CWD-positive animals. An August 13 report on
the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership website questions this and asks for a
congressional review.
Lesser prairie chicken populations appear to be growing, says a July 1 press release from the
Western Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies. Surveys estimate a range-wide breeding
population of 34,408 birds this year, compared to 33,094 in 2018. Voluntary conservation
efforts by landowners have created more habitat in recent years.
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Ranchers and conservationists working together? It’s happening in Florida, where a coalition
of these unusual allies aims to keep “working” lands solvent and free of development. Cattle
ranches in Florida, says an August 11 article on bioGraphic.com, have some of the best wildlife
habitat the state has left.
Outdoor Afro is a nonprofit social community with 36,000+ participants in 30 states that
reconnects African Americans with Nature through outdoor recreation and environmental
education. Rue Mapp, a 2019 National Geographic Education Fellow, launched it as a blog from
her kitchen table in 2009.
Dept. of Unintended Consequences, sec. 419(b): Light-emitting diodes are the poacher’s new
best friend. A July 31 article in Science credits LED flashlights—bright, lightweight and energy-
efficient—with significantly boosting the kill of nocturnal animals in Amazonia. Researchers
found that since 2011, when such flashlights became widely available, some nighttime hunters
are twice as effective as before.
A 200-fold increase in trafficked dead jaguars seized by authorities in Central and South
America between 2012 and 2018 was reported in a new study reviewed on Mongabay.com on
August 11. The surge in jaguar poaching seems to be driven by Chinese traders.
If hunting and fishing stopped, what would be the consequences? An August 3 Arizona Daily
Sun article challenges readers who would like to see “blood sports” disappear and discusses the
Wild Harvest Initiative and wildlife habitat, biodiversity, environmental management and food
security: “If you equate all the wild meat harvested [in the US] as quarter-pound
hamburgers . . . annually recreational hunting [provides] a staggering 2.17 billion meals of wild-
harvested, chemically free meat.”
Hey, I’m no hunter or angler! Why do I have to buy a hunting or fishing license to use nearly
600 public lands in Colorado? The answer (see last month’s Dispatches): because the license
fees help support those lands. But now, reported The Colorado Sun on August 6, animal-rights
and other “non-consumptive” groups are pressuring CO Parks and Wildlife to adjust the rule.
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Can “The Harvest” change public perceptions? A Denver media company wants to showcase
the “true heartland way of life” in a crowd-sourced film of that title, hoping that it will
popularize hunting the way Robert Redford’s “A River Runs Through It” did fly-fishing. In Forbes
on July 21, the producer promised an entertaining movie that will “go straight at stereotypes
and preconceived notions, and audiences will be surprised as we detonate misconceptions
about [the hunting] way of life and the people who enjoy it.” The 45 million-plus Americans who
hunt and fish are a $76 billion annual economic force.
This fall, Wyoming will welcome game meat donated to hungry families through its Food
From the Field project. Resident and nonresident hunters will be able to donate meat from elk,
deer, bighorn sheep, mountain goat, pronghorn, bison and moose.
An ‘insect apocalypse’? Evidently not in North America, yet. In response to recent studies of
massive insect die-offs, biologists at Hendrix College in Arkansas reviewed more than 5,000
datasets on arthropods in North America, covering thousands of species and dozens of
habitats over decades of time, and found no change in population sizes. (Read also “Where
have all the insects gone?” in National Geographic in May.)
Greenland’s glaciers will keep shrinking even if global warming stopped today. The study,
published on August 13 on Nature.com, finds that Greenland's annual snowfall is no longer
enough to replenish its 200-plus large glaciers that flow into the ocean. Before 2000,
Greenland’s ice sheet would have about the same chance to gain or lose mass each year. Now,
the ice sheet will gain mass in only one out of every 100 years. The Greenland ice sheet is
presently the largest single contributor to sea-level rise. On August 20, The New York Times
noted that Greenland lost more than 530 billion metric tons of ice in 2019, more than double
the annual average since 2003.
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Asia
Cutting China’s enormous appetite for illegal wildlife products may be possible through
religion, suggests a new British study in People & Nature. Applying Western conservation values
to this market—for everything from rhino horn and lion bones to rosewood and pangolin scales
—doesn’t work; instead “utilising Confucianist, Daoist and Buddhist belief messaging in
targeted campaigns could effectively change the behavior of end consumers in the East Asia
illegal wildlife trade chain.”
And now it’s Laos: Another Asian country’s hunger for wildlife products has now been
documented, in an August 19 report in Nature Conservation. It advises the Lao government that
“stricter and reinforced legislation is needed” to regulate the trade in and consumption of
wildlife. “Across the tropical regions, mammals and birds have been vanishing, with recent
models estimating up to 83% decline by 2050.”
Meanwhile, in Russia, reindeer are targeted for antler velvet on the Taymyr Peninsula in the
Krasnoyarsk region. In the spring, poachers ambush the deer at river crossings and saw off
their fresh antlers while they’re in the water, leaving behind open wounds. The velvet is
valuable for its supposed medicinal properties. NatGeo.com reported on August 12 that
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poaching and commercial hunting have reduced this reindeer herd, the largest on Earth, from 1
million to 400,000 animals in two decades.
Europe
Britain is ‘among the most nature-depleted countries in the world,’ says the National
Biodiversity Network’s latest State of Nature report, with most of its important wildlife
species having declined by an average of 60% since 1970. One quarter of UK mammals and
nearly half of the birds assessed are at risk of extinction, and the area inhabited by “priority
species” has shrunk by 27%.
In the mountains of central Italy, villagers herd their livestock to and from summer and winter
pastures every year in a tradition recently recognized by UNESCO for its cultural significance.
Transhumance (Latin: trans, “across,” and humus, “earth”) is the seasonal movement of people
and livestock between grazing grounds, which has been practiced for thousands of years on
every inhabited continent. See the May issue of National Geographic for more.
Conservation is not the same thing as animal rights, but an ethical approach to hunting
demands consideration of animal welfare as well as conservation outcomes. In his “Natural
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Storytelling” blog, British wildlife scientist and author Hugh Webster explores grouse moor
management and driven grouse shooting, snipe and woodcock shooting, the conservation
status of mountain hare and more.
Robots are tracking sperm whales in the Mediterranean Sea. A July 29 article in Endangered
Species Research reports the findings of unmanned underwater gliders that have been
recording the animals’ sounds over thousands of kilometres. There are fewer than 2,500 adult
Mediterranean sperm whales and threats to them include entanglement in fishing gear, ship
strikes, marine debris, human noise and whale-watching activities.
Pacific
How fare Australia’s kangaroos, koalas, wombats and other animals after the cataclysmic
bushfires of seven months ago? On July 17, NatGeo.com reported on the aftermath of the
cataclysm, which killed at least one billion animals—and then COVID-19 shut down most
recovery efforts.
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World
DNA ‘fingerprints’ could quickly nail illegal wildlife products. Standard DNA assays can take
up to 6 months in a laboratory; a new portable device being developed at universities in
Alberta and Ontario promises near-instant species identification of wildlife samples by
customs inspectors and others looking for prohibited materials. The news was in
Geographical.co.uk on July 17.
50% more coastal flooding in the next 80 years due to climate change, predicts a July 30
British-Australian study in Springer Nature's Scientific Reports. Worldwide, “extreme flood”
events will affect more than 800,000 square kilometres (309,000 sq mi), putting 225 million
people at risk and threatening infrastructure worth 20% of global GDP.
Sharks are now gone from one in five coral reefs, “the greatest decline of reef sharks ever
recorded,” says a report on ScienceMag.org on July 22. The most comprehensive study yet of
shark abundance indicates that overfishing has driven sharks to “functional extinction” in the
waters of eight countries. However, reefs elsewhere have plentiful sharks due to conservation
measures.
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Open access + open source = open science. The Netherlands Institute of Ecology reports in
PLOS Biology on July 29 that presently only one in four scientific papers makes public the
computer code behind its analysis. “If this code is shared with others, they can fully understand
and evaluate the results. They can also use the code for their own work, accelerating scientific
discovery.”
As with climate change, misinformation harms wildlife conservation. A common theme in the
general media is that “well-loved animals are on the brink of extinction, people pay to kill them,
this is horrible, and if we stop it, we will save species.” To counter this message, that stopping
hunting would benefit conservation, 11 recognized wildlife scientists published a peer-
reviewed article last month in Conservation Biology. They point out that such simplistic
narratives, backed up by misrepresentations from animal-rights groups, have become a toxic
wave of conservation misinformation similar to climate-change denial. [Ed. note: The
Conservation Frontlines Library offers the latest information on this topic.]
Startling global decline in freshwater fish—as much as 76% in many species in the past 50
years, according to a July 27 article in NatGeo.com. Because of habitat loss, pollution,
overexploitation and climate change, migratory freshwater fish are “among the most
threatened animals on the planet.” The study’s lead author, from the Zoological Society of
London, believes that when all data from the tropics are in, the numbers will be even worse.
Saturday, August 22, was Earth Overshoot Day, the day when humanity—you, me, all of us—
used up the entirety of the biological resources that Earth can renew this year. The Global
Footprint Network has been calculating this date, a measure of the unsustainability of
humanity’s actions, since 2006. Then, Earth Overshoot Day came in September and for most
years since, it has been creeping ahead on the calendar—until now. Because the pandemic put
the brakes on human activity, EOD arrived three weeks later this year than last.
Tribal Stories, a storytelling platform, was launched on the International Day of the World’s
Indigenous Peoples, August 9, reported Mongabay.com. The site, by the Netherlands-based
nonprofit People’s Planet Project, currently features films created by the A’i Cofan community
in Ecuador and the Kīsêdjê community in Brazil.
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Supporting indigenous people benefits conservation, concludes a University of Helsinki study
released on July 29. It argues that the agendas of conservationists and indigenous peoples are
converging and demand coordination. Using the Amazon as an example, “There is no doubt
that [Amazonia] is at a crossroads in its social-ecological history. Rollbacks on environmental
protections and Indigenous Peoples’ rights across the entire region are opening up vast natural
areas to new external pressures.”
Hunting is a polarizing topic that makes many people think of poaching elephant ivory or rhino
horn, or a “triumphant (usually) white Westerner straddling a dead, charismatic mammal.” But
the matter is much broader and more nuanced, says a June 5 article on JustConservation.org
that discusses human-wildlife conflict, wildlife revenues and uses, conservation incentives and
management issues.
How’s your country’s ‘green recovery’ coming along? CarbonBrief.org tracks the emissions-
reduction plans of 103 world economies in this interactive tracker, just updated for Nigeria,
Ireland and Spain. It also notes that CO2 emissions, which fell dramatically during the early
days of the pandemic, are now rebounding.
Cleaning rivers by transforming their banks is beginning to pay off in the Eastern US, and the
tactic may work in other regions where streams have been dammed for centuries. Science
produced this short video in late August.
Biodiversity has real, measurable $$$ value. For example, guano is worth at least $474 million
per year, according to a recent study in Trends in Ecology & Evolution. What is harvested for
organic fertilizer brings in $20 million annually, while seabird poop sliding into the ocean every
year provides nitrogen and phosphorus to marine ecosystems worth $454 million.
The majors are trending into ‘green’ energy. A different sort of environmental tipping point
was reached this year when major oil companies began to shift their focus to renewable
energy. The spur, reported the Financial Times on July 15, was COVID-19, which severely cut
the global demand and price of oil. It’s a complicated story, but the author concludes that “The
stage looks set for a much more rapid transition . . . comparable in speed and reach with the IT
revolution of the past two decades.”
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Respect Science, respect nature, respect each other
Publisher Conservation Frontlines Foundation (USA)
Editor-in-Chief Gerhard R. Damm (South Africa)
North American Editor Silvio Calabi (USA)
Consulting Editor & Hunting Brand Development Derek Carstens (South Africa)
Administrative Director: Colleen Roberts (USA)
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